How to Sell a Landscaping Business · As Featured On Inside the Blueprint on Bloomberg TV and Fox Business News · Confidential conversations only · (888) 858-7191
CGK Business Brokers & M&A Advisors · A composite story about how to sell a landscaping business

This is Carlos’s story.

How to sell a landscaping business at the right time, to the right buyer, for the right price is the question Carlos had been turning over for two years before he picked up the phone. When the right time came, he called CGK Business Sales. Carlos ran a $2.4M commercial landscape maintenance and design-build operation outside a major Texas metro: 28 employees at seasonal peak, 14 year-round, eight mowers, four trucks pulling trailers, and a book of business that ran 65% commercial maintenance contracts (HOAs, property management firms, an office complex or two) and 35% residential design-build projects. He was 54. His knees were gone. His back was gone. The H2B labor pipeline he depended on for two decades had grown harder to navigate every renewal cycle. He came to us in early 2024 because he was ready to be done and did not know who else to talk to about how to sell a landscaping business this size. This page is what happened next, and what could happen for you. Carlos is a composite, not a single real CGK seller, but the patterns and details are pulled from real landscaping engagements.

9 of 10 engagements close 5.0 ★★★★★ from 100+ Google reviews 15+ years selling privately-held landscaping businesses
Chapter 1

The night before Carlos called us.

Most owners who decide to sell a landscaping business have been thinking about it quietly for a year or two before they pick up the phone. Carlos was no different. He was 54. For 19 years he had been on jobs at first light, on phones at second-cup-of-coffee, and out late drafting design proposals personally because no one else in the company had ever closed a $90,000 backyard job the way he could. The business did $2.4 million in annual revenue, had 28 employees at seasonal peak and 14 year-round, ran eight mowers and four trucks pulling trailers, and split its book of business roughly 65/35 between commercial maintenance contracts and residential design-build.

Why owners decide to sell a landscaping business

His daughter was in nursing school. His son worked construction in Colorado and was not coming home to swing a string trimmer in Texas heat. His wife taught middle school and had been asking him quietly for two years when he was finally going to be done. His knees were gone from nineteen years of squatting on a foam pad to set sprinkler heads. His back was gone for the same reason. The H2B labor pipeline he had built his crews around had grown harder and more expensive to navigate every renewal cycle since 2022, and the next round of policy uncertainty was already making him queasy. He had been approached three times in the prior fourteen months: once by a regional commercial-maintenance roll-up that found him through a trade publication, once by a competing landscaper across town who said he would buy the book on a handshake, and once, almost as an aside at the end of a routine site walk, by a long-time HOA board member who had been on the board of his largest contract for twelve years and casually mentioned that if Carlos ever decided to sell, the board member would want to talk first.

That is the night he found CGK and submitted the form. We called him back at 8:42 the next morning.

Chapter 2

The conversation we had on the first call.

The first call was 38 minutes. We did most of the listening.

Carlos talked about his foreman of twelve years, his lead designer who could close a $30,000 patio job but not yet a $90,000 backyard renovation, the H2B sponsorship paperwork that ate two weeks of his calendar every winter, and the fact that he had not taken a real summer break since his daughter started high school. He talked about the three commercial accounts that anchored his maintenance book, the office complex he had been mowing every Tuesday morning for fifteen years, and the design-build pipeline he ran personally because every proposal needed his eye. We asked about the business in the way you would ask if you were trying to understand it, not in the way you would ask if you were trying to win the engagement. What we were listening for was not just the financials. We were listening for whether Carlos was actually ready to sell, what he was working toward, and whether his expectations on price were grounded in what the market would actually support.

At the end of that call, we set up a working session: an in-person conversation where one of our Managing Directors would walk Carlos through our valuation model and tell him honestly what his business was likely to command. We did not promise him a written report. Written valuations involve substantially more work, and we charge for those when a seller actually needs one for estate planning, a partner buyout, a divorce, or another documentary purpose. The walkthrough was free because Carlos was clearly thinking seriously about selling, the way someone thinks about it before they actually do it. Whether that ends up being in a year, three years, or longer, we make the same call.

The valuation session was the following Tuesday at 7 a.m. at his yard, before the crews rolled out for the day’s first stops.

Chapter 3

Carlos was not ready to sell a landscaping business yet. He went home and waited eight months.

The valuation session showed Carlos that his business was worth meaningfully less than he had been hoping. Two issues were dragging the number down. The first was Carlos himself. He WAS the design-build sales engine. Every proposal over $20,000 went through him personally. The long-tenured commercial customers all picked up the phone for him by first name. To a sophisticated buyer, that looked like key-person risk on the highest-margin part of the book. The second was the H2B labor sponsorship file. Carlos had been managing it himself for nineteen years, the paperwork was inconsistent year over year, and two of the largest commercial maintenance agreements were on month-to-month renewals rather than annual auto-renew language.

We told Carlos honestly: he could go to market now and accept the discount, or he could spend six to twelve months elevating his lead designer into a real design-build sales role, cleaning up the H2B file, getting his commercial maintenance agreements onto annual auto-renew paper, and tightening the financials so they would tell a clean story under buyer scrutiny. We said the second path would likely command a meaningfully better number from a wider range of buyers, including the kind of high-net-worth individual buyer who would never look at a key-person-risky business but would pay full price for a well-organized one.

This is the part most brokers skip. Most brokers would have signed Carlos that day, taken him to market, and made the commission whether or not the deal was the best one for him. We told him to wait, even though it meant we did not get paid for eight months and might never get paid at all if he changed his mind.

Carlos went home and waited. He spent the next eight months promoting his lead designer into a true design-build sales lead, then bringing on a junior designer underneath that role. He hired a part-time HR consultant to clean up the H2B sponsorship file year by year. He renegotiated the largest commercial maintenance agreements onto annual auto-renew terms with thirty-day cancellation language. He read up on what active acquirers were paying for landscape businesses through resources like the National Association of Landscape Professionals. He called us back in late summer 2024 and said he was ready to sell a landscaping business that was finally in the shape it needed to be in.

Chapter 4

What we did when Carlos came back.

What it takes to sell a landscaping business properly

When an owner is ready to sell a landscaping business with CGK, the speed surprises them. We took Carlos’s business to market in two weeks once he got us his updated financials, commercial maintenance contract portfolio, residential design-build pipeline, equipment inventory and replacement schedule, and crew roster with H2B status. The blind teaser went out to 78 buyers we had pre-qualified across five buyer types this time: regional commercial-maintenance roll-up platforms (some PE-backed, some independent), strategic acquirers from adjacent home-services categories, search funders looking for a stable cash-flow operating business in their first acquisition, high-net-worth individual buyers using SBA 7(a) financing with prior ties to landscaping or home services, and adjacent commercial real-estate operators who saw vertical integration in their property portfolios.

Fifty-four of those buyers signed NDAs and received the full Confidential Information Memorandum. Thirty-six entered our structured data room. Twenty-two submitted Indications of Interest. Eleven advanced to Letters of Intent. We narrowed to six for management presentations. Three re-submitted refined LOIs after the management meetings.

Carlos decided between two of the top LOIs. They were materially different. One was a higher headline price from a regional commercial-maintenance roll-up backed by a Texas-focused private equity fund, with a conventional escrow structure and an earnout tied to commercial contract retention over three years. The other was a slightly lower headline price from a high-net-worth individual buyer using an SBA 7(a) loan, with 90 percent cash at close, no escrow, and a 10 percent seller note paid back over five years. The HNWI buyer was a former HOA board member who had sat on the board of Carlos’s largest commercial customer for twelve years and had personally watched Carlos perform every Tuesday morning for a decade. We walked Carlos through what each would actually deliver to him under realistic and pessimistic scenarios. The HNWI deal was the better one. Carlos already knew and respected the buyer, the cash position day one was substantially stronger, and the structural cleanliness saved him from a three-year earnout babysitting situation. He took it.

Through the whole process, the same CGK Managing Director who had taken Carlos’s first call eight months earlier was the person walking him through every conversation.

Chapter 5

What the deal actually looked like.

How the deal looks when you sell a landscaping business with CGK

Carlos’s deal closed roughly five months after we restarted the engagement. The buyer was a high-net-worth individual: a senior executive at a regional home-services company who had also sat on the HOA board of Carlos’s largest commercial maintenance contract for twelve years. He had built personal capital across a 25-year career, had recently exited his executive role, and wanted to operate a business he understood from the customer side. He financed the acquisition with personal equity and an SBA 7(a) loan. The deal was structured as an asset sale, as SBA 7(a) financing typically requires.

The headline price was slightly below the competing roll-up offer but the structure was meaningfully better. About 90 percent of the purchase price came as cash at closing, funded by the SBA loan plus the buyer’s personal equity. The remaining 10 percent was a seller note paid back over five years at a competitive interest rate, secured by the business assets. We successfully negotiated the escrow holdback to zero in exchange for tighter representations and warranties insurance, which is unusual for deals at this size and a real win for Carlos’s day-one liquidity. Wire hit on a Friday afternoon in November.

Carlos stayed on as a paid advisor to the buyer for three months after closing, which let him introduce his foreman, his lead designer, his commercial customers, and his H2B sponsorship paperwork to the new owner on his terms. After that, he was done.

Chapter 6

What happened to Carlos’s people.

Carlos cared more about his foreman, his lead designer, his H2B-sponsored field crews, and his long-tenured commercial customers than he cared about almost any other variable in the deal. The HNWI buyer’s twelve-year prior relationship with the largest commercial customer made this part easier than it would have been with an institutional buyer. The buyer already knew and respected the field crews. He had watched Carlos’s foreman direct work on his property a hundred times.

The buyer kept all 28 employees, honored the existing pay structure, and committed to maintaining the H2B sponsorship paperwork year over year. Carlos’s foreman was promoted to Operations Manager with a meaningful comp bump, taking over day-to-day yard operations. Carlos’s lead designer, who had stepped into the design-build sales role during the eight-month wait, kept that role and earned a quarterly bonus structure tied to design-build margin. Long-time commercial customers retained 100 percent through the transition, partly because the buyer was already one of them, partly because Carlos personally introduced him to the rest, and partly because the buyer continued the same Tuesday-morning service standard Carlos had been delivering for a decade.

Carlos’s daughter, in the middle of nursing school clinicals, sent a card and a long voicemail. His son flew home from Colorado for a weekend to celebrate. His wife, the middle-school teacher, pulled the Spain itinerary out of the kitchen drawer where it had been waiting for two years. They flew to Madrid in March.

Chapter 7

What Carlos told us afterward.

Why owners who sell a landscaping business with CGK keep coming back

About three months after closing, Carlos called the Managing Director who had run his deal. He said two things that the Managing Director still tells new sellers about.

The first was that the eight-month wait between his first call and his actual engagement was the most valuable part of the whole relationship. He said: “If you had taken me to market when I first called, I would have signed with the first roll-up that put a number on paper. Telling me to wait eight months, and telling me exactly what to fix in the meantime, is what made the difference between an okay outcome and a great one. I would have left almost a quarter of the proceeds on the table by going early.”

The second was about the structure of the deal. He said: “I almost took the higher headline price from the roll-up because the top-line number looked better. What you walked me through, the actual cash in my pocket on closing day versus three years out, including what an SBA-financed deal could deliver in cleanliness and certainty versus an institutional deal with an earnout, is the conversation my CPA and my lawyer both said they had never seen another broker have.”

This is what we mean when we say we sit with you in the decision, not just the transaction. Carlos is one composite story, but the pattern is real. The owners we work with who decide to sell a landscaping business usually find their way to us through versions of Carlos’s situation, and the relationships start with a long listening session and a free walkthrough, not a pitch.

Now It Is Your Turn

Ready to sell a landscaping business? Where are you in Carlos’s story?

If you are starting to think about how to sell a landscaping business, we should talk. There is no commitment and no pressure. The first conversation is free. The valuation walkthrough that follows is free when you are seriously thinking about selling, whether that is in a year, five years, or longer. We only charge for formal written valuations, and only when you actually need one for estate planning, a partner buyout, or another documentary purpose. Submit the form and a senior CGK Managing Director will reach out within one business day.

If you are Carlos at month 1: just exploring

You are not sure if you want to sell yet. Your knees are telling you something, your wife is asking when you are going to be done, you are curious about what your commercial maintenance book might be worth, or you have just been approached by a roll-up that called from a trade publication. Most of our best engagements start here. Submit the form and we will schedule a working session. You walk away with a real number and a clear sense of what to do next, with no obligation to do anything.

If you are Carlos at month 8: ready to go

You have done the work to clean up the business. The financials are tight. Your lead designer can close design-build jobs without you. Your H2B paperwork is on a real cycle. Your commercial maintenance contracts are on annual auto-renew paper. Maybe a long-time customer has hinted that they would be interested if you ever decided to sell. You want to run a real process. Submit the form and we will be in touch within a business day to talk about timing, scope, and what your first 30 days as a CGK seller would look like.

If you are not sure where you are

Most owners are not sure. Submit the form and start with the conversation. We will figure out together where you are. We are equally happy to tell you to wait twelve months as we are to take you to market in two weeks.

Or call us directly at (888) 858-7191.

Start your own story

A senior CGK Managing Director will respond within one business day. Strictly confidential. For owners of landscaping businesses doing $1.5M+ in annual revenue. The first conversation and the valuation walkthrough that follows are free for any seller seriously thinking about selling, on any horizon.

Confidential. No obligation. Direct routing to a named CGK business broker, not a junior screener.

The CGK Managing Directors Who Help Owners Sell a Landscaping Business

One of these eight people would lead your engagement.

When you decide to sell a landscaping business with CGK, one named senior Managing Director stays with you from the first call through the wire transfer, just like Carlos’s Managing Director stayed with him for eight months and then for the engagement that followed. Our Managing Directors come from Wall Street investment banks, hedge funds, Fortune 500 corporate finance, and operating-business leadership. Cornell MBA. U Chicago Booth MBA. CFA. CMT. Naval Academy. Goldman Sachs. Merrill Lynch. Deutsche Bank. AIG. T. Rowe Price.

Greg Knox, MBA, CFA, CAIA, FDP — Managing Principal at CGK Business Sales, helping owners sell a landscaping business
Greg Knox
MBA, CFA, CAIA, FDP · Managing Principal
Cornell MBA · Master of Data Science (Michigan) · Deutsche Bank · T. Rowe Price · Wachovia
Wes McDonough — CGK Managing Director who helps owners sell a landscaping business
Wes McDonough
Managing Director
25+ years M&A, corporate finance, and entrepreneurship · Former operations leadership at a privately-held global talent solutions firm · High school valedictorian
Myres Tilghman, CMT — Managing Director, CGK Business Sales
Myres Tilghman
CMT · Managing Director
25-year career in finance & capital markets · 18 years trading international derivatives for hedge funds · MA Economics, U Richmond
Derik Polay — Managing Director, CGK Business Sales
Derik Polay
Managing Director
25+ years M&A and distressed securities · Former MD at IFI Capital · Former SVP at Fulcrum Capital
Matthew Mistica, MBA — CGK Managing Director with experience to sell a landscaping business
Matthew Mistica
MBA · Managing Director
15+ years finance & entrepreneurship · 7 years Corporate Finance at Chevron and Shell · Cal Poly SLO & University of Houston MBA
Jason Clendaniel — Managing Director, CGK Business Sales
Jason Clendaniel
USNA · Managing Director
U.S. Naval Academy graduate (BS Economics with Honors) · 10 years Naval Officer · 10+ years S&P 500 Sales, BD, M&A
Eric Lewis, MBA — Managing Director, CGK Business Sales
Eric Lewis
MBA · Managing Director
20+ years financial industry · Goldman Sachs · Merrill Lynch · Cargill · TD Options · U Chicago Booth MBA · UT Austin
Matthew Zienty — Managing Director, CGK Business Sales
Matthew Zienty
Managing Director
25+ years financial industry · Deutsche Bank · SunAmerica Securities · AIG Financial Advisors · Former VP overseeing 45 nationwide sales offices

What sellers say after they sell a landscaping business (and other businesses) with CGK

5.0 ★★★★★ from 100+ Google reviews across our offices

I could not be happier with the experience I had selling my business with CGK. Greg did a detailed analysis of my business and helped me price and position it right for the market. After receiving multiple offers at full asking price, the rest of the process went very smoothly, and we closed in less than two months.

Hanna M. Service Business Seller · Closed in under 2 months at full asking

Selling my business was a once-in-a-lifetime experience, and I’m incredibly grateful to have had Wes by my side throughout the process. He brought perspective, pushed when necessary, and always had my best interests in mind. His experience and strategic approach allowed me to maximize the sale price while minimizing long-term risk and obligations. If I had to do it all over again, I wouldn’t hesitate to choose him as my broker.

Adam Neville CGK Seller · Worked with Wes McDonough

Derik located multiple interested strategic buyers that produced more than one serious offer. The negotiations were tough but Greg and Derik’s experience helped us overcome. We got a great result for our employees and for the owners. We would recommend them without reservation.

Bob Taylor CGK Seller · Worked with Derik Polay & Greg Knox

We sold a business that was 47 years old and being run by second generation within a year of working with Wes. CGK has a system that attracts serious prospects to review opportunities. Wes was able to make the overwhelming feeling of selling easy and to a certain extent enjoyable. I never felt alone or in the dark throughout the entire process.

Jennifer Williams CGK Seller · Worked with Wes McDonough

We decided to sell our company in 2025. Talked to another M&A company in the Houston area. We felt very comfortable with Greg and Matthew at CGK. Could not have made a better choice. From day 1 till final closing and even after 30+ days, they have been here helping us with documents and support during the transition. Thanks can not be said enough.

Rickey Thomas CGK Seller · Worked with Matthew Mistica & Greg Knox
Note for Greg: four reviews above are real, sourced from CGK city pages (Louisville, Austin, Louisville, Houston). Hanna M. featured quote is also real, from your existing site. We can swap, add deal sizes, or rotate any of these later.
As Featured On

Inside the Blueprint, on Bloomberg TV and Fox Business News.

Carlos’s wife is the one who first sent him a clip of CGK on Bloomberg. She had been listening to a podcast about how to sell a landscaping business on her commute home from school and the episode mentioned CGK by name; she sent him the link before he had decided to do anything. CGK Business Sales is featured on Inside the Blueprint, the syndicated business television series. Our episode aired on Bloomberg TV and Fox Business News. Watch the segment, then start a confidential conversation.

Featured On: Bloomberg TV
Featured On: Fox Business News
CGK Offices

The CGK office Carlos called was in his local Texas market. Yours might be one of these.

When you sell a landscaping business with CGK, whichever office you reach, you get the entire firm. Carlos worked with a CGK Managing Director based out of his local Texas market, but his deal benefited from a buyer pool we sourced firm-wide, including the high-net-worth individual buyer who ultimately won. Click any city to learn about our local presence and the named Managing Director leading that market.

Austin, TX
2720 Bee Caves Road
Austin, TX 78746
(512) 900-5960
Baltimore, MD
111 S Calvert St
Baltimore, MD 21202
(410) 777-5759
Colorado Springs, CO
102 S Tejon St
Colorado Springs, CO 80903
(719) 471-0115
Dallas, TX
325 N Saint Paul St
Dallas, TX 75201
(469) 998-1968
Denver, CO
1600 Broadway
Denver, CO 80202
(303) 974-7978
Houston, TX
1200 Smith St
Houston, TX 77002
(713) 588-0240
Louisville, KY
312 S 4th St
Louisville, KY 40202
(502) 287-0332
Nashville, TN
424 Church St
Nashville, TN 37219
(615) 800-7118
Phoenix, AZ
40 N Central Ave
Phoenix, AZ 85004
(602) 714-7470
San Antonio, TX
700 N Saint Mary’s St
San Antonio, TX 78205
(210) 526-0094
Washington, DC
1050 Connecticut Ave NW
Washington, DC 20036
(202) 888-6120

Other Questions Carlos and Other Landscaping Sellers Ask Us

Practical answers to what comes up before, during, and after the kind of engagement Carlos went through, when you sell a landscaping business with CGK.

What size landscaping businesses does CGK sell?
CGK works with privately-held landscaping businesses doing at least $1.5 million in annual revenue and $300,000 or more in Seller’s Discretionary Earnings. Our process is tailored for landscape businesses up to approximately $100 million in revenue, covering the full range from High Main Street to lower middle market. We have closed landscaping deals across most sub-segments: commercial landscape maintenance, residential design-build, hardscape and irrigation, sports turf and athletic field maintenance, snow and ice management, lawn care and chemical applications, and tree care or arboriculture services.
What multiples do landscaping businesses typically sell for?
Landscaping business multiples vary widely by mix of recurring commercial maintenance vs project-based design-build, the size and quality of your contract portfolio, customer concentration on top accounts, gross margin per crew-hour, and how transferable the business is beyond the owner-operator. Landscaping businesses with a strong recurring commercial maintenance book on annual auto-renew paper tend to command meaningfully higher multiples than pure design-build shops where every dollar of revenue restarts every January. The right answer for your specific business depends on the comparable transactions in your sub-segment, the buyer pool currently active in your geography (which at smaller revenue can include high-net-worth individual buyers using SBA financing, not just institutional roll-ups), and how the deal is structured. A free CGK valuation conversation is the fastest way to narrow that range to your business specifically.
How does customer concentration on a few HOA contracts affect my valuation?
HOA contract concentration is the single biggest variable in landscape maintenance valuations and the one most likely to chip the price down at LOI. CGK starts every landscaping engagement by mapping your contract concentration and helping you understand how buyers will read it. If your top two or three HOA contracts represent more than 20 to 25 percent of revenue, sophisticated buyers will price that as concentration risk and structure the deal with an earnout tied to those contracts staying. Sometimes the answer is to go to market now with a clear story and a buyer who knows the customers personally, sometimes the answer is to spend twelve months diversifying. The free walkthrough is where we work through this honestly with you.
Who buys landscaping businesses?
Buyer pools for landscaping businesses are wider than most owners realize. They generally fall into five buckets: regional commercial-maintenance roll-up platforms (some PE-backed, some independent), strategic acquirers in adjacent home-services categories looking to vertically integrate, search funders running first-acquisition processes, high-net-worth individual buyers using SBA 7(a) financing (often with prior ties to landscaping or commercial property management), and adjacent commercial real-estate operators looking to internalize maintenance on their portfolios. Each bucket prices the same business differently. CGK’s structured competitive process makes them compete against each other so the highest-quality buyer for your specific business surfaces, which is sometimes the institutional roll-up but often, at smaller revenue levels, the individual buyer with personal capital and SBA financing.
How much does CGK charge to sell a landscaping business?
CGK works on a success-fee basis. You pay nothing upfront and nothing if the business does not sell. The percentage depends on transaction size and complexity, and we walk through the exact terms during our first confidential conversation. There is no retainer and no monthly fee.
How long does it take to sell a landscaping business?
Most CGK engagements close 6 to 12 months from signed engagement to wire transfer, though some close in as little as 3 to 6 months. CGK can take a landscaping business to market in as little as two weeks once a seller provides clean financials and the right operational detail (commercial contract portfolio with renewal status, residential design-build pipeline, equipment inventory and replacement schedule, crew roster with H2B sponsorship status, working capital schedule). Seasonality matters in landscaping more than in most service categories. Buyers prefer to underwrite a business that is heading into a strong commercial-maintenance season, which means timing the start of the engagement to land in the data room during late winter or early spring is often advantageous.
How do buyers think about my H2B and seasonal labor pipeline?
Labor is the single most consequential operational variable in landscape valuations after customer concentration. Buyers know that the H2B program has been politically volatile and operationally expensive to navigate, and they price the risk accordingly. Sellers who have built a clean, well-documented H2B sponsorship file, who maintain relationships with multiple agencies and law firms, and who have a domestic crew foundation underneath the seasonal labor force command premium valuations from sophisticated buyers. CGK helps you organize the labor story before going to market so what reads as risk to a casual buyer reads as managed competence to a serious one.
How do design-build projects and recurring maintenance contracts get valued differently?
They are valued on entirely different multiples. Recurring commercial maintenance revenue, especially on annual auto-renew paper with multi-year customer tenure, is the highest-quality revenue in the landscaping industry and commands premium multiples because it is genuinely predictable and transferable. Residential design-build revenue is valued more conservatively because each year restarts the sales cycle and a meaningful share of design-build closes still depend on the owner-operator personally. CGK builds a value bridge during the working session that shows you which dollar of revenue is worth what, which often surprises owners who assumed design-build was their most valuable segment because it carried the highest margins per project. Margin per project is not the same as multiple at exit.
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